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Protoss is a fully automated hydrogen atom placement tool for protein-ligand complexes. It adds missing hydrogen atoms to protein structures and detects reasonable protonation states, tautomeric states, and hydrogen coordinates of both protein and ligand molecules by optimizing the hydrogen bond network.

GeoMine enables the automated mining of protein-ligand binding sites. Based on individually designed queries, users can search for spatial interaction patterns in huge collections of protein-ligand complexes and binding pockets. The regularly updated GeoMine database relies on the free database systems SQLite and PostgreSQL. It supports radius-based pockets (based on ligands and predicted pockets (based on DoGSite3) for query generation. The query management is based on XML (for the REST service) or JSON in the GUI mode. Its output consists of the query-based superpositions of the matched binding sites and statistics on matching points, distances, and angles.

PoseView automatically generates 2D diagrams of protein-ligand complexes, focusing on the interactions between protein and ligand. Interactions between molecules are estimated by an underlying interaction mode that relies on atom types and simple geometric criteria. It adheres to the conventions of chemical structure diagram generation. The quality of the resulting diagrams is comparable to manually drawn examples from books and scientific publications.

METALizer predicts the coordination geometry of metal ions in metalloproteins. Users can compare potential coordination geometries to those found in the examined structure. The predicted coordination geometries and the observed metal interaction distances can be interactively compared to statistics calculated based on the PDB.

PoseEdit automatically generates 2D diagrams of protein-ligand complexes, focusing on the interactions between protein and ligand. Interactions between molecules are estimated by an underlying interaction model that relies on atom types and simple geometric criteria. The structure mining tool GeoMine also uses this model to describe binding sites. In addition, users can manipulate the diagrams by translating, rotating, mirroring parts of the structure, adding additional interactions, or removing them. Furthermore, users can add individual labels or adjust available labels. Users can download the final 2D diagrams for a binding site of interest in JSON or SVG format.

HyPPI classifies a protein-protein complex based on its interaction type into permanent, transient, or crystal artifact. Permanent protein-protein complexes are only stable in their complexed state. Their subunits would denature upon dissociation of the protein-protein complex. Transient protein-protein complexes are stable in the complexed as well as in the monomeric form, depending on the necessary function of the complex. Crystal artifacts have no biological function and are artificially formed during the crystallization process. The discrimination is performed using two characteristics of the protein-protein complex, the hydrophobicity of the interface (ΔGhydrophobic) and the quotient of interface area ratios (IF-quotient). The IF-quotient considers whether the protein-protein interface is symmetric.